We investigate the optical response properties of an atom-assisted spinning optomechanical system, in which a spinning optical resonator is coupled simultaneously to a two-level atomic ensemble and a mechanical resonator driven by a weak pump field. Remarkably, we demonstrate that by simply reversing the rotation direction, the system can be switched between a low-absorption electromagnetic and optomechanically induced transparency state and a high-absorption state, constituting a form of non-reciprocal optical control at the quantum level. Furthermore, by tuning the phase difference between the mechanical pump and the probe field, direction-dependent switching between absorption and gain is achieved. These non-reciprocal effects originate from the Sagnac-induced frequency shift in the optical mode, which leads to distinct optomechanical and atom–cavity couplings for opposite spinning directions. We also show that the absorption spectrum can be modulated by the angular velocity and the atomic number. Our results indicate that the optical properties of the hybrid system can be manipulated via the angular velocity, phase difference, and atom number, with potential applications in chiral photonic communications.
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Heng Hu
Ningxia University
Jinting Li
Guizhou Electric Power Design and Research Institute
Xiaofei Li
Guizhou Electric Power Design and Research Institute
Entropy
Chinese Academy of Sciences
China Electric Power Research Institute
Guizhou Electric Power Design and Research Institute
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Hu et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69b5ff8d83145bc643d1c4aa — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/e28030324